ABSTRACT
Corruption and the Lava Jato Scandal in Latin America brings together key international and interdisciplinary perspectives to shine new light on Lava Jato, or Operation Car Wash, Latin America’s largest corruption scandal to date. Since 2014, this scandal has unfolded in surprising ways to expose collusion between construction companies and state officials in Brazil and 11 other countries. The corruption uncovered amounts in the order of hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes and billions of dollars in stolen state funds.
The volume features evidence that the main construction company at the center of the scandal was—apparently—deliberate about seeking business in corrupt markets. It also evaluates the ambiguous role played by the media, whose members often relied uncritically on classified information released by the authorities. The volume further contributes to our understanding with studies on a number of other relevant topics, including: the overlap between corruption and the planning of the Rio Olympics; Mexico and Peru’s contrasting responses to Lava Jato; the policy reforms needed to avoid a similar scandal in the future; and the roadmap for how Lava Jato should end. Across 15 chapters by leading and emerging scholars and practitioners, this book engages with these issues from a balanced and unbiased perspective, including interviews with key stakeholders on both sides of the case.
As one of the first book-length studies to deal with Lava Jato in the English language, this ground-breaking volume is a compelling reading for advanced students and researchers in areas including Corruption Studies, Public Ethics, Political Science, and Latin American Studies, as well as for practitioners working to make governments more accountable.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|48 pages
An introduction to Lava Jato
chapter 3|14 pages
Competing to be corrupt
part II|92 pages
Brazil’s experience with Lava Jato
chapter 4|17 pages
Urban planning legacies and corruption
chapter 6|12 pages
Sunlight is the best disinfectant
chapter 7|19 pages
Lava Jato and Brazil’s web of accountability institutions
part III|42 pages
Lava Jato beyond Brazil
chapter 11|18 pages
Fighting corruption in a hostile environment
part IV|60 pages
Where to from here?